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Wednesday, October 04, 2017

Fiction Review: Be Frank With Me

I was thrilled when my neighborhood book group chose Be Frank With Me by Julia Claiborne
Johnson for our September selection because I’d heard good things about this
novel. It lived up to my expectations – almost everyone in my book group loved
this funny, quirky, heartwarming story of a very unusual little boy.

Alice is a young twenty-something assistant working in the
publishing industry. Her boss, editor Isaac Vargas, gives her a strange but
important assignment: to fly to California and help one of their star authors
finish a long-awaited book. M. M. Banning (known as Mimi to her friends) is a
mysterious and reclusive author who wrote one best-seller when she was young
that became a classic and never wrote another novel (think Harper Lee and To Kill a Mockingbird). She’s gone
through some financial difficulties and now needs
to publish a second novel, decades later.

Alice is sent to help her with household tasks so she can
write, help her with the computer (she still writes on a typewriter), and keep
an eye on the progress of the book for Mr. Vargas. When she arrives, however,
she finds that her primary role is that of caretaker for Mimi’s unusual
nine-year old boy, Frank. In fact, Mimi doesn’t let her see anything she’s
working on.

To give you an idea of Frank’s oddness, here is Alice’s
first glimpse of him:

“M.M. Banning and I were seated on the living room couch,
watching her son playing outside in the hot, bright son. The kid, dressed in a
tattered tailcoat and morning pants, accessorized by bare feet and a grubby
face, looked like some fictional refugee from the pages of Oliver Twist, one who’d walked all the way to Los Angeles from
Dicken’s London and had slept in ditches at night along the way.”

That passage also gives you a glimpse of the author’s
wonderful sense of humor. Those turned out to be Frank’s play clothes. He
always dresses in miniature outfits that look like they came from classic
Hollywood films but was usually far more dapper and cleaned up for outings
beyond the house and yard. Here’s a passage from the opening prologue,
describing Frank as he and Alice rode a city bus together:

“But his looks weren’t what had our fellow travelers
transfixed, certainly not in a place like Hollywood where gorgeous kids are so
common that you even see them on city buses. No, what got people staring was
Frank’s look. Before we left the
house that morning, he’d shellacked his hair like a mini Rudolph Valentino, put
on a wing-collared shirt, white tie and vest, a cutaway coat, morning pants,
and spats. Also a top hat, which he balanced on his knees while we rode to the
hospital because, as he’d explained to our bus driver when the man admired it,
“A gentleman never wears his hat indoors.” “

So, yes, Frank is adorable but also very hard to get close
to. He’s a very quirky kid (after a while, you realize he probably has autism),
as is his reclusive mother. Frank has two hard and fast rules: No touching
Frank, and no touching Frank’s things. Alice, of course, learns the importance
of these rules by trial and error.

Alice and Frank spend their days together, in a constantly
amusing way, and slowly – very slowly – get to know each other better and come
to care about each other. Mimi is mostly shut up in her room, typing (at least
Alice hopes she’s really typing).
There is a big mystery as to who Frank’s father is, since Mimi has never said.
Add into the equation one other person whom the isolated Bannings allow into
their lives – the mysterious Xander, a handsome man who describes himself as
Frank’s “piano teacher and itinerant male role model.”

This is a very, very funny novel. It’s become trite to say
something is “laugh-out-loud funny,” but it is really true in this case – I was
bursting out with unexpected laughter the whole time I was reading this book.
It’s not just funny, though; this is
also a very warm, tender story about the growing relationship between Alice and
Frank. Elements of mystery and suspense are also woven in along the way. Will Mimi
finish her book? Who is Frank’s father? Where does Xander go when he disappears
and what is his story anyway? Quirky, prickly, sweet Frank, though, is at the
heart of this witty, clever, uplifting story, and I was sorry to say goodbye to
him at the end.

287 pages, William Morrow

Disclosure: I borrowed this book from the library. My review is my own opinion.

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About Me

I'm a freelance writer who loves to read and cook. My husband and I have two sons, and we all enjoy travel and being outdoors. My older son and I both have chronic illnesses, but we focus on finding joy in every day!